Googles equivalent to the apple sandbox would be Google drive.
Not entirely. Drive does not hold application data and rosters, purchase history, linked device information, etc. Drive is more similar to Dropbox than iTunes.
Definitely not the same thing but there is no reason why you can't have both.
You do get both. Apple just merge the two aspects together because of the way that their ecosystem works. It doesn't mean that they are dependent on one another, though.
Kies, arrgh, now youv'e ruined the friendship
I hated Kies with a burning passion. Friendship fixed?
I think the problem is that We are talking about different things. The newer Apple model is icloud which is exactly the same as google drive (in principle). iTunes is a baby version of that. It doesn't need the cloud. Its a distributed cloud across a few devices. By the time google released android, that model was less relevant so they opted for the lower maintenance file system. My point on that side is that there is no reason (that benefits the consumer) for Apple not to give access to the file system or to allow syncing to multiple devices.
No, I disagree. I think it is because, to an extent, you misunderstand the Apple ecosystem and it's relevance to why iTunes is the default point of file transfer requirements.
I do agree with the comparison of iTunes to a "baby version" of the Google ecosystem- at a microcosmic high level, it is. But there are certain measures and controls that differentiate the two in a big way. Which is why I disagree with the Google Drive comparison.
For example- the Google ecosystem can run on any device- Android, iOS, Blackberry, PC, tablet, etc. The iTunes one cannot.
iTunes is a large media repository and distribution point for your Apple device. You purchase the relevant content from iTunes, in addition to it managing what you already have. It becomes your central point of control, and your entire set of habits and customs towards media consumption, is ideally focused in and around iTunes, and the overlaying hardware that it manages. Google does the exact opposite with their ecosystem.
Play Music and Videos are starting to incorporate iOS-esque features in Android. But even then, they don't seek to control the media you own and use, and stick those features to Android alone, because it would create restrictions across the other platforms that does not tie into their ecosystem model.
So this is why I prefer to dissociate file system access and transferring, with account syncing and management- they are mutually independent of one another. Apple and Google's reasons for applying their different file system access policies, differ as a result.
So it kind of comes back to what I initially said- iTunes is not for you (it isn't for everyone, myself included), and you should move over to Android. It gives you the freedom that you prefer. Using Apple devices to the fullest encourages a lifestyle change- in terms of the way you consume media, and the hardware that you use to consume this media. I think that those running a full suite of Apple hardware would agree that the interoperability of Apple's different hardware products, is second to none, and is a lifestyle choice to accept and utilise.